Recently today @Centrino (Please Tell me if i got this wrong) has posted in shout box that he had a problem with His PS3 DECR-1000A after messing around with Otheros.bld but after playing with it his Developer Kit went into a boot loop and couldn't find a Rescue Disc to fix it but on the other hand I did and what i gave him worked for him he Booted into Linux..

So I am just gonna leave this here. Fix Below just in case it happens to any other User

Code:

ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT
This note gives some tips on how to recover your PS3-Linux system when it
hangs up or no longer boots.
You can always find the latest version of this document, and some other useful
technical documents here:
http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/geoff/cell/
PS3 BOOT RECOVERY HOWTO
1) Basic PS3 Tricks
** main power switch **
You should NEVER use the main power switch in the back of the PS3 to shutdown.
You can always force a shutdown with the front power button.
** force a shutdown **
To force the PS3 to shutdown, for example when Linux hangs up, press the power
button on the front of the system for about 10 seconds. The hypervisor will
take control and shutdown the LPAR, then put the system in standby mode (red
LED).
** force the GameOS to boot **
To force the PS3 to boot into the GameOS, shutdown the PS3, then press and
hold the power button on the front of the system until a beep is heard, then
release the power button. The video mode and boot flag settings will be re-set
to the defaults and the GameOS will boot.
** check bootloader integrity **
Use ps3-dump-bootloader to get the md5sum of the installed bootloader and
compare that value to the md5sum of the original bootloader file.
ps3-dump-bootloader --sum
** re-install bootloader **
If you can boot into linux, then you can re-install bootloader with this
command:
ps3-flash-util -w <bootloader-file>
<bootloader-file> is the name of the bootloader image file. The bootloader
image file is often named otheros.bld. If you cannot boot Linux, put the
bootloader image file on a supported type of media and boot into the GameOS and
install as you did in the original installation. GameOS instalation
instructions are here:
http://www.playstation.com/ps3-openplatform/manual.html
** backup flash data **
It is a good idea to make a backup of the data stored in flash memory.
To backup the entire flash memory use this:
dd if=/dev/ps3flash of=flash-bak-`date +%y.%m.%d-%H.%M.%S`
You can also make a partial backup that does not include the bootloader
image with this:
dd if=/dev/ps3flash of=flash-bak-`date +%y.%m.%d-%H.%M.%S` bs=2k count=1
Included in the partial backup is the bootloader location and size
but not the bootloader image, so update the backup if you install a
new bootloader. If you restore from a a backup that used a
different bootloader you can recover by re-installing the current
bootloader. This will write the proper bootloader location and size
to flash.
You can view the settings in flash with this command:
ps3-flash-util -s
If the flash gets corrupted it can then be restored with this:
dd if=flash-bak-xx.xx.xx-xx.xx.xx of=/dev/ps3flash count=1 bs=`ls -l flash-bak-xx.xx.xx-xx.xx.xx | cut -d' ' -f5`
2) Other Recovery Tricks
** rescue CD **
A rescue CD can provide a richer environment for system recovery. Fedora
provides iso images:
http://download.fedora.redhat.com/pub/fedora/linux/releases/11/Fedora/ppc/iso/Fedora-11-ppc-netinst.iso